Archives for the tag: pull request

In a DevOps world, work is often merged to master multiple times a day, but it’s not always easy to know when changes ship. Developers have full control over deploying their changes to customers which makes it extra important that those changes are tracked. The good news is that teams can automate much of this process using JIRA Software or JIRA Service Desk. Here are six actionable steps for better release management in the JIRA platform.

Stash is now called Bitbucket Server. Read our announcement blog.
The Stash & Bitbucket team is excited to announce the release of pull request tasks – the perfect way to stay on top your pull request progress.
When a pull request is created, we know it's only just the beginning of an iterative process. A pull request allows you to notify your team of your proposed changes and this typically leads to discussions and feedback, which might result in further changes to the code. While

Nowadays applying a fix to a project is as easy as creating a fork - which conjures up a full remote copy of the project for you to hack on - selecting the file you want to change, pressing Edit and committing your fixes.
What if you are at the receiving end of a pull request (abbreviated PR in the following) instead? Using a polished web UI is great and often that's all you need. Click a button to Approve, click a button to Merge and you're done.
But that's not always the case! It's a common

Pull requests – now at the heart of the code discussion. Ever since we introduced pull requests in Stash 1.3, and added branch permissions in 2.0 that let you restrict who can merge pull requests, we've been dreaming up ways to make pull requests even more valuable for developers.
With today’s release of Stash 2.1, we’ve added a slew of new features that truly power collaborative development. Stash 2.1 simplifies your Git development workflow by providing more contextual awareness of key

Interested in the latest Stash release? Check out What’s New »
Developers at big companies have aspirations similar to those at small, nimble start-ups. Plain and simple, they want to be able to 'get in the zone' and drive faster code velocity for both themselves and their teammates. For many, Git is the solution they've been searching for. And it's not just perception - Git helps more developers today get into that state than ever before. Yet enterprises have been hesitant about making

Stash is now called Bitbucket Server. Read our announcement blog.
Interested in the latest Stash release? Check out What’s New »
Chocolate rain, rage face, double rainbow. Great memes spread like wildfire. One minute you're unaware, the next you're singing some Korean song you barely understand and dancing like a horse. DVCS (distributed version control) is by no means a meme (it's definitely not going away), but it's spreading with the same effect.
Git's flexibility is one of its